2:2 MIGRATION AND BUSINESS CYCLES
has been nothing in these comparisons to indicate how the volume
of immigration or of emigration compares in number of persons
with the corresponding change in the number of persons employe d
To the extent that migrants are members of the working class, the
number of arrivals less the number of departures represents a net
addition to the number of workers seeking employment. Unless
this net addition is accompanied by an incifease in the number of
persons employed, the necessary result is an increase in the total
number of unemployed persons in the United States. If, in a given
month, the immigration of workers exceeds the emigration of
workers by 50,000, and the increase in the number of employed in
the United States is only 30,000, it is obvious that there has been a
net increase of 20,000 in the number of the unemployed.
Fully satisfactory data for making comparisons of seasonal net
migration and changes in employment are not available, but we
have made the best approximation we could, in the following
manner. In the first place, for the several industries which have
been selected, for reasons previously indicated, as particularly
significant when studying employment opportunities for immigrants,
we have computed an estimate of the typical number of persons
employed in each month of the year in the pre-war period. Statis-
tics for the year 1909 were used in determining the average number
of workers to be assigned to each industry. This computation yields
an estimate of the typical month-to-month change in the number
employed in factories, bituminous and anthracite coal mining,
railway track maintenance, and construction work, when the cyclical
tendencies have been as far as practicable eliminated, leaving the
joint effect of the trend and seasonal factors. Inasmuch as the
typical net migration, by months, represents a corresponding in-
crease or decrease in population, it is appropriate to compare
therewith the typical change in employment which results from
the combined influence of the growth and seasonal elements.
The results of the employment estimates appear in Table 59 and
Chart 55.
For the net migration to be used in comparison with the typical
month-to-month change in employment, we have selected the
excess of arriving over the number of departing male aliens. This
group includes those male aliens who are officially classified as
temporary migrants—that is, as nonimmigrants or nonemigrants.
Many of these come for employment purposes, and hence it ap-
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